Word: moneyed
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...class teams, the freshman are of course the most important and need the most money. The football team last fall left a debt outstanding of about one hundred and seventy-five dollars; this the nine and crew ought to pay besides their own expenses. Now the manager of the nine has decided not to ask for any subscriptions whatsoever, but to rely wholly on the receipts of games. The crew, therefore, is the only organization which will ask for support. Since the nine will leave the field of subscriptions wholly clear for the crew, the football debt ought, in justice...
...papers on Sunday, Monday, or Tuesday evenings of this coming week by applying at the CRIMSON office. About this number of additional copies will be printed of each supplement. Students who wish to be perfectly sure to have extra copies of future supplements may send an order, with money, to W. B. Wolffe, at the CRIMSON office. Those men who left orders at Leavitt's or Thurston's for the full series will have these filled if they forward the money. If the number of the supplements is not six, all money overpaid will of course be refunded...
...social and educational progress along the lines of university extension and university settlement work." It is published twice a month during term time, with two numbers during the summer. The subscription price is fifty cents a year. Though the obect of the Review is not primarily to make money, it is hoped that some money for the Union can be made by it. It should be understood that "contributtors, editors, and advertising solicitors receive no financial compensation whatever for their services in connection with the Review." Articles will be written for the paper by "members of the faculty of Harvard...
...growth of the Cooperative Society merits attention. When it was founded it had but a single room in which to do business, it ventured to deal only in books, and the amount of its money transactions was very small. Today it does a business of over a hundred thousand dollars a year; it has found it necessary to enlarge its quarters again and again until it occupies a large part of Dane Hall and has also taken rooms elsewhere; and it has widened its scope of business so as to include not only books but furniture, men's furnishings, tailoring...
...first sight, hard to believe. The problem is a practical one and it concerns every man. Among men of different interests and pursuits different idols are worshipped as all-powerful. At different times cotton, or coal, or sugar has been called king, and at all times among business men money has been held the highest power. Scientists believe knowledge to be the greatest ruling power. Yet no one of these powers can be truly called king of mankind. Money, that is representative of all material good, indeed secures obedience from all men. It is essential, too, as a factor...